Right, the teddy bear stuff is ridiculous.* i had heard about it years ago. One of his security officers, now retired, spilled the beans on several of Andy’s stupider habits. Mainly that guy was furious that Andy kept subverting security measures and putting everyone in the palace grounds at risk because he would insist on letting unknown people through Palace gates.
*Teddy Bears: Andrew has 50 teddy bears on his bed that MUST be placed in specific positions each morning when the housemaids make his bed. There is a chart that shows where each bear goes on the bed.
The teddy bear thing is weirder than weird! And to think that DH is sometimes annoyed by my decorative pillows - of which I have very few, I might add!
the British people are as a whole, not sympathetic as to what happens to Andrew and his former wife, Sarah Ferguson.But they ARE extremely concerned about what happens to the corgis, the queen’s two corgi dogs.
the story put out on media is that Queen Elizabeth did not want more corgis after her last one died because she knew she was elderly and wouldn’t live a long time, and she would not outlive any puppies. But Sarah and Andrew got her two corgis anyway with a promise they would take the dogs when the queen expired. it has been cattily suggested that Andrew and Sarah made this move just to stay close to the queen.
When it was announced Andrew would be leaving Royal Lodge and moving to Adelaide cottage which is still on the grounds of Windsor Great Park, the Palace said tersely that the dogs would remain with family members. But now that Andrew has been banished out of London into the countryside I’ve not heard about the fate of the dogs. Sarah isn’t going with him so who gets the dogs?
I know the dogs will be fine because the British people will see to it that they are.
okay----here's a book i am NOT reading at the moment, but maybe one o' you kids could skim through it and let me know if it's any good.(see photo). But yeah---I'd hope they have detailed chapters on the destruction of not only Mary, but Rosemary, and Mary Jo and Marilyn and Martha and the Bessette sisters plus too many others to list here. Yup.
Last edited by littlebittybobby; 11-15-25 at 1:41pm.
Just finished Madame Fourcade's Secret War by Lynne Olson. Fourcade was a young mother of two and estranged from her husband when France was invaded by Germany. She created what became France's largest and most successful spy network, The Alliance, and like many women spies and resistance members fell into obscurity after the war. She was Germany's most wanted woman and had a huge bounty on her head. With everyone questioning her along the way because she's a woman.
Olson interview one of Fourcade's children and other primary sources in addition to researching the MI6 archives.
Granted Fourcade through her estranged husband had connections to several French generals and her sister was friends with Yvonne de Gaulle. So setting up a spy network was easier for her.
Great reading about how ordinary people served their country while under foreign occupation. Was a bit confusing at time when Olson uses MI6 agent's real names instead of their cover names at times, and MI6 gave resistance fighters a three letter and two digit code name and Fourcade gave her agents animal names.
Olson writes about ordinary people who did extraordinary things when their country, neighbors, or anyone needed them.
These were my November books:
- No Two Persons by Erica Bauermeister - this was an interesting story, that was almost more like a series of stories, based on the idea that no two persons read the same book. It goes from the author writing the book, to various people who read it and how it affects them, and some of the characters circle back and become interconnected by the end.
- When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi (NF) - this was a somewhat emotionally difficult read, but very moving and well done. Paul was a young neurosurgeon who was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer. He describes grappling with the diagnosis, the impact on him and his loved ones, undergoing treatment, acceptance and how he managed to live his shortened life with as much meaning as possible.
- Anxious People by Fredrik Backman - I really loved A Man Called Ove, but I didn't care for this one at all. It felt very contrived, the characters were two-dimensional, and I was relieved when I was done with it.
- A Friend Like Henry by Nuala Gardner (NF) - True story by the mother of a profoundly autistic young boy, and how the adoption of Henry the golden retriever made an amazing difference in developing his ability to interact with the world and live his best possible life.
- Notable DNF (Did Not Finish): Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance by Robert Pirsig - I really wanted to like this one, but I threw in the towel at about page 260. It was a tedious philosophical discourse on the definition and nature of "quality," occasionally relieved by the story of the author's motorcycle trip with his young son.
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